Flowers and remembrance plaques left at the walls of the Kilskeagh medieval church on the site of a former community graveyard from the past.

Uncovering a community’s lost heritage in Kilskeagh, Co. Galway

National Heritage Week, one of the busiest times of the year for any Irish heritage practitioner, has come and gone for 2025, and we spent the week delivering events and activities across the country. During that time, we experienced one of the most meaningful Heritage Week events of our career in Kilskeagh, Co. Galway. We’ve worked with the Kilskeagh Heritage Committee since 2023 in their project to uncover the ‘Old Kilskeagh’ church and graveyard site, the majority of which has long been inaccessible due to an extremely heavy woodland overgrowth which has been in place for potentially up to a century. Since 2023, we’ve worked to carefully uncover and identify the church and graveyard, also working with ecologist John Lusby to ensure a balance between the archaeology and ecology of the site.

On Friday 22nd August, well over a hundred locals came for a blessing of the graveyard (which was in use by the community up until the twentieth century) and a tour of the important history, archaeology, and ecology preserved there. The parish priest delivered prayers outside of the walls of the former Kilskeagh parish church, dating to the 15th/16th century. The oldest visitors had not been able to access the graveyard for decades, and most of the youngest visitors had been unaware that it had ever existed in the first place. Many members of the community have family members buried in the area – some as close as children and siblings – and it was an emotional and important visit to step foot on the site again and feel that their family had been respected and remembered with the access to and clearance of the site. All of the graves so far (bar one) do not have any grave markers with names or dates, and are simply laid out and marked by limestone slabs and boulders.

Blessing of the Old Kilskeagh Church and Graveyard in Galway by the local parish priest, who is standing outside the ruins of the walls of the medieval parish church dating to the 15th/16th century

The overall site has potentially been in use since the sixth century and has seen multiple layers of use over hundreds of years. However, Friday’s event was a real example that history is not always ancient, and that the past can be much more present in our lives than we often think. Huge credit is due to Kilskeagh Heritage Committee Chairman John Tarpey, who is the powerhouse behind the project, as well as all the community volunteers who donated their time for hours of difficult clearing work over the years. Looking forward to the future of working with this site, which still continues to surprise us as we uncover more!

Crowds gather at the Old Kilskeagh Church and Graveyard site in Galway for a blessing of the formerly lost graveyard
Crowds gather at the Old Kilskeagh Church and Graveyard site in Galway for a blessing of the formerly lost graveyard
Flowers, candles, and memorial plaques brought to the Old Kilskeagh Church and Graveyard site in Galway by community members whose family members from many generations ago had been interred there

The Old Kilskeagh Church and Graveyard Project was supported in 2025 by The Heritage Council Community Heritage Grant Scheme.

Leitrim Women and the Western Button Factory, Manorhamilton

Phase 2 of our “Leitrim Women Through Time” project, a collaboration with the North Leitrim Women’s Centre, recently kicked off with a special event exploring the important connection of the former Western Button Factory in Leitrim to the history of women in the county – many of whom first had the opportunity to work outside the home in that industry. The factory was a large source of employment for women in the region, and they filled many of its roles. 

Women not working directly in the factory also carried out ‘piece work’ for it at home to earn extra money – by stitching the produced buttons onto display cards for shop sale. Our event featured a talk on the history of the factory by local historian Maureen Keaney, and was followed by many discussions and a craft workshop led by artist Mary Foley and featuring the use of original vintage buttons made in the Western Button Factory. It was wonderful to meet a number of the former factory workers, who shared their memories and experiences, and to view a large number of the original buttons made in the factory over its lifetime (1937 – 1972). People from the area raided their cupboards and button tins to bring out their small pieces of history for display and comparison!

Our unique button craft workshop was inspired by the stitching patterns used by the women who took on the ‘piece work’ of stitching the buttons to card in their homes, and our participants put their own mark on the button stitching traditions used by these women. We hope to combine the pieces created on the night to make a future commemorative artistic piece to remember all of the women who worked in the factory over its lifetime.

We were delighted with the success of the night, and our thanks are due to all who participated and who made it so special – we’re looking forward to another Leitrim women’s history event coming up next month! Phase 2 of the “Leitrim Women Through Time” project is supported by The Heritage Council Community Heritage Grant Scheme 2023.

Children’s Heritage Workshops in August!

We’re running a number of free and inclusive children’s workshops in the month of August in Galway, Laois, Sligo, and Roscommon!

We’re part of the Summer Stars programme for Galway Public Libraries, with free children’s workshops in prehistoric pottery making at 11.30am & 1.30pm in Moylough Library on Thursday 4th August, and at 10.30am & 12.30pm in Dunmore Library on Friday 5th August. Please contact the libraries to book your place, as places are limited. These workshops are kindly supported through the Heritage in Schools programme under The Heritage Council.

For Heritage Week, we’ll be in Laois Libraries for free prehistoric pottery workshops on Wednesday 17th August – at 10am in Mountrath Library, at 12.15 in Abbeyleix Library, and at 3pm in Durrow Library. Please contact the libraries to book your place, as places are limited.

We also have our pottery workshops at Carrowmore Megalithic Cemetery on Saturday 20th August at 11.30am & 1.30pm. These workshops are specially scheduled for Wild Child Day in Heritage Week, and are kindly supported through the Heritage in Schools programme under The Heritage Council. Advance booking is required via email to scealheritage@gmail.com.
https://www.heritageweek.ie/event-listings/hands-on-history-making-prehistoric-pottery-at-carrowmore-megalithic-cemetery

Finally, we have a free train-making workshop at the Castlerea Railway Museum on Sunday 21st August at 11.30am. Advance booking is required via email to scealheritage@gmail.com.
https://www.heritageweek.ie/event-listings/hands-on-history-create-a-train-at-castlerea-railway-museum

Join us for some great hands-on heritage experiences – for any enquiries about any of the workshops, please contact us at scealheritage@gmail.com!